BMC Pulmonary Medicine (Dec 2006)

Pulmonary sarcoidosis associated with psoriasis vulgaris: coincidental occurrence or causal association? Case report

  • Panagou Panagiotis,
  • Sampaziotis Dimitrios,
  • Rallis Efstathios,
  • Psathakis Kostas,
  • Katsenos Stamatis,
  • Nikolopoulou Melita,
  • Tsintiris Kostas,
  • Bouros Demosthenes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2466-6-26
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 26

Abstract

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Abstract Background Sarcoidosis is rarely associated with a distinct disease. One disease infrequently associated with sarcoidosis is psoriasis. Case presentation This case study describes a 38-year-old male, who presented with chest pain, high-grade fever, arthralgias and a skin rash accompanied by bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy on his chest radiograph. Extensive investigations including fiber-optic bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage and labial and skin biopsies, demonstrated that two distinct clinical entities co-existed in the same patient: pulmonary sarcoidosis and psoriasis vulgaris. Combination therapy for both diseases was applied and the patient was greatly improved. Conclusion This is the first well-documented case of sarcoidosis and psoriasis in the same patient, reported on the basis of safe and widely-used techniques that were not available until fairly recently. These disorders might share common pathogenic mechanisms that could explain their co-existence in the patient.